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Comparison of Reverse Transcription Quantitative Real-Time PCR, Flow Cytometry, and Immunohistochemistry for Detection of Monoclonality in Lymphomas
Author(s) -
Anders Ståhlberg,
Pierre Åman,
Linda Strömbom,
Neven Zoric,
Alfredo Diez,
Olle Nilsson,
Mikael Kubista,
Börje Ridell
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
isrn oncology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-567X
pISSN - 2090-5661
DOI - 10.1155/2014/796210
Subject(s) - flow cytometry , real time polymerase chain reaction , immunohistochemistry , biology , reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction , microbiology and biotechnology , pathology , medicine , gene , messenger rna , genetics , immunology
In healthy humans, 60–70% of the B lymphocytes produce kappa light chains, while the remaining cells produce lambda light chains. Malignant transformation and clonal expansion of B lymphocytes lead to an altered kappa : lambda expression ratio, which is an important diagnostic criteria of lymphomas. Here, we compared three methods for clonality determination of suspected B cell lymphomas. Tumor biopsies from 55 patients with B cell malignancies, 5 B-lymphoid tumor cell lines, and 20 biopsies from patients with lymphadenitis were analyzed by immunohistochemistry, flow cytometry, and reverse transcription quantitative real-time PCR. Clonality was determined by immunohistochemistry in 52/53 cases, flow cytometry in 30/39 cases, and reverse transcription quantitative real-time PCR in 33/55 cases. In conclusion, immunohistochemistry was superior to flow cytometry and reverse transcription quantitative real-time PCR for clonality identification. Flow cytometry and reverse transcription quantitative real-time PCR analysis has complementary values. In a considerable number of cases tumor cells produced both kappa and lambda light chain transcripts, but only one type of light chain peptide was produced.

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